Although there are other online die rollers that explicitly handle exploding dice, if you want to use Elliquiy's then the easiest thing is probably to just have the player roll a ton of extra dice every time they roll. Then read them in order, using as many additional dice as necessary to do your exploding.

For example, if you're doing Star Wars, and the roll is 3d6 plus an exploding Force die, you could put in 10d6.

If the results are:1,2,6,3,4,5,5,2,2,6Then you only need 1+2+6+3. The "3" is the Force Die, and since it's not a six it doesn't explode. Your total is 12 and you ignore the rest of the dice.(1,2,6)(3)(4,5,5,2,2,6)

If the results are:1,2,6,6,6,3,3,2,1,5Then your regular dice are still 1+2+6. Your Force die is a 6, so you keep adding more dice from the list until you hit one that isn't 6. In this case 6+6+3. Your final total is 24.(1,2,6)(6,6,3)(3,2,1,5)

The key here is to just say up front how you're going to read the dice and stick to it. Don't decide after you roll, and don't let the players use different systems. Otherwise you might end up with someone saying "that 6 in the first position, that's my Force Die", or something along those lines.

This post is about playing games where you have multiple dice behaviors to determine a single outcome.

In Savage Worlds, players roll both their normal die and a d6. Both dice explode and you take the better score.

In Star Wars, players roll a number of d6s and one, the force die, explodes. All dice are added to determine the score.

Since the die roller doesn't support these except as separate rolls, I'm curious if any GMs here have had issues with system games using these.

Maybe I don't understand the question. Are you saying Elliquiy's dice bot doesn't support exploding dice?If so, you might want to re-read the description of the Extra field, which actually allows you to set exploding dice.

I'm saying it doesn't support multiple types in a single roll (a d8 and a d6, for example) or a single exploding die in a throw of multiples (3d6, only one of which explodes). So a player must make two rolls for every task resolution and in the first case, take the best result, and in the second, add the two rolls together. Has anyone used these systems and have the extra steps been an issue in play?

I'm saying it doesn't support multiple types in a single roll (a d8 and a d6, for example) or a single exploding die in a throw of multiples (3d6, only one of which explodes). So a player must make two rolls for every task resolution and in the first case, take the best result, and in the second, add the two rolls together. Has anyone used these systems and have the extra steps been an issue in play?

As I suspected, I have misunderstood, then. And yes, this might be an issue, unless you're willing to roll twice every time. But then, there's usually enough time between posts to make any roll, if you're using Savage Worlds.Personally, I'd designate the leftmost die as the exploding die for d6 system, and disregard any explosions from the other dice.

Obviously, the actual results, given that we only take highest, are 10, 17, 9, 11 and 18, but that's not a big deal in my book. And it's much more convenient for damage like 2d8+d6+9, which is quite possible in SW with a raise ! Granted, this would probably be bad news without any explosions, but that's besides the point.